To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

Van Keuren & Heubler,
muMXM OF Tn
W E T H E I R S J F I E U i
F I L L M IE
WethanSflld, Cmu..
TenB;$1.00aYear,i]iAtYaDGe,
a u f e u o o p i B s THUBOEimB.
•FHiiiM o o w s n r o« aruoaxioib.
0 i ] i b s c v i p f i o ] i
OSE DOLLAR A YEAR,
i n A d v a x i o e *
E F L L E R S F L E L D
r ^ w V ' ' ^
/m»-, ' rfm /mm, v . Vs**.;.-. •« ^
^ b s c v l p t l o i x
tii ONE DOLLAR A YEAR,
l a A d v a n c e *
VOLUME III. W E T H E R S F I E L D , QONN., T H U R S D A Y , M A R Q H 2 1 , 1 8 8 9. NO. 16.
Van Keufsn &
Book «Bd
PRINTERS.
F l n t - a a » I t a k AImi*
B0(S8,
POffCDil
BILL m u s s ,
0IS0XTLAB8, WIDS!DM
sadeiwy kW awdpH* e« :
ta]^^ taMyeoisn.!* iktUm^l
iacBalML
The decUnfl ia land valoM still eon-'
tiniMS in England.
Hie latest estimate places the United
States Senateat aTaloationofflSg.OOO.-
OOO.
Mora than a million colored children
in the Soathem States never enter a
•diool-room.
More oranges, lemons, bananas, figs
and rainns are consnmed in the United
States than in a n j other country in the
vorld.
The New Orleans Pieayvne has sug-gested
the importance of establishing in
tiiat c i ^ a technical school for instmc-tiM
in the maauf actors of sugar.
Tin cremationists have lost fifteen per
cent, of timr streng&ln tiw last year,
aad it is beUered b r " ^ <%icago Htrald
Oat anodier year or two w4l finish them.
The New ToA Bmdd families the
dieeifal information that '<the South
•ever began a year with a brighter out-loak
than die had at the banning of
18Mt» .
All this talk about a national fiiower
fAr this country is superfluoua, jocosely
obasms the Chicago Nmt. Of course
the ottly flower suitable to be the emblem
of the United States is the daisy.
Loadoa is to be fortified b y a ^ r d le
• t forts on its south side. The defenses
win ia aany cases take the form of in>
tNBched eamps, in which large forces
saaj be gathered. Does John Bull fear
aaiaTaaoat
. TtMre has been a tall iatrodoeed be-t
o n the Mkbigaa Logislature making
i t ae logger ineumbent upon the woman
t a BMBtioa her age ia the wedding
ttoaaw. That, 'axplaias th« gaUaat New
Twk qwawsrmt is ia defer-i
t e ^ bliuhisat aeatitlve women
j o a s f t r haabaada.
A, oartaaa a o H t ^ w«« iatroduosd to
a m a t a d his oab ia tiw wiMlwaaw
«CthaWhi«lwdariat te UarriMaaad
H w t i e laaMgura) balL A •twaopUeoa
MMia was «tMl«d oa aa* at the oMman
W thk Paaaiaa BaMiaf, aad whaa *
fWttHMa dMktd his OMtitga ha gava
^%»«ha«fantor, lashed
I t e h u t e M «MM
KNOW THYSELF.
8sek ye the battle-groond, where be the foe-men
fonnd
Worthy thy steel?
No Alexander need sigh for a grander
World to reveaL
Ota, there's a world to win back from the
hosts of sin.
Sorrow, and death:
On with the warfare, ttien—dose with the
foes of mm.
Bating thy breath.
Not with the clash of arta*, not witii war's
load alarms,
Hnrl thy defiance;
Not on the tongae or pen, not on the strength
of men.
Place thy reliance.
Let bot thy guiding star, shining from skies
afar,
ninmine the way;
Let bnt Uis inner velee tHiiiper, and make
thy choice
Clearer than day.
Thou art the hattle-groand—tiiyadf the foe-man
found
Seeking thy Ufe:
Then is a wcrid wiiliin-<A,iHiat a world to
lifted, and so how did Graham get that;
blood stain? Accident gave me the
"We don't buy second-hand watches,"
' replied the jeweler, but he carelessly,
knowledge. I was looking the ground picked the watch up, examined it, ahd'
' over at Lossing'g for the fourlh or fifth then said:
time, when one of the ^ogs came and "lhi« is one of our watches. 1 re-leaped
upon me in a caressing way, Los- member selling it two or three moilthS
sing observed it and remarked: ago."
'•vUd Fan was always very fond of "Yes," replied the man, reaching ottt
Graham, and I believe she misses him. for it.
Here, Fan, let me look at you paw. Ah I "Let's see the name,'' contitlued thil
it's about as well as ever, isn't it?" • jeweler, as he went for a bdok.
"What ailed her paw?" I asked. i "Never mind," replied the man. 'If
"She got a terrible cut on a piece of you don't waat to buy, very well; Tm
glass a few weeks ago." ; in a hurry."
"About the time Giaham was ar-1 "Sold to Mrs. Albright of-: said
rested?" • the jeweler as he handed it over.
"Yes." I "The woman who was murdered 1" I
"Then it was her bloody paw that said to the stranger. "Were you her
made the mark on his vest that night!" husband?"
"Good heavens, but it must have
been!"
I had a clue and a hope. Everything
changed in an hour, and I now believ^
Graham innocent and went to work to
"N—, yes I" he stammered.
"And you have not been near 1
That is strange t You will go with me
to the police."
On with the strife!
Then, when the fight is done—then, when the
field is wcm-
Know'stthonthyselt
liSt the loud psans roll, on through the glad-dened
soul.
That, beyond tear or doubt, thrills with the
inward shout,
"Victoryl victoryj
Conquest of seU!"
aiioU Oeaes, in L^pincott,
TWO IfARROW ESCAPE&
Be tried to draw his pistol, bht l . W
secure proofs. I posted up to Louis- too quick for him. The police recbg-ville
ana examined the police records nized him as a bully and a bad duuntc-for
arrests. I followed a score or more ter, and inside of half a day I 'had e^
of cases to their finish, but got noting, tablished the fact that he was acqualuted
It was my belief that a white man com- with the murdered woman. "Hien 1
mitted the crime, and that he meant traced him to the depot, and On the
robbery, but was frightened off. I re- train to the village, and later On found
turned to the village and looked every- cwo villagers who remembered of seeing
body over, but got no satisfaction. The him there that night. When I had got
day of the trial was coming and I was in him reasonably sure I confronted him
despair, but accident came to my aid with my facts, and he broke down and
again. I happened into the hotel barn made a full confession. He had come
as the landlord pulled a lot of rubbish out to see Mrs. Albright that night, and
out of a stalL Hidden away with it he had found her on bridge and quar-was
a fine saddle, and as it was brought reled with her. She was desperate ahd
to Ught the man exclaimed: defiant, and in a fit of passion he had
"Bless me, here is the dead manjp choked her to death. He had seised the
saddle!" watch, but left all els^ and so the Coro-
"Was it missingi" I asked. ner's jury had been misled.
"It was stolen on the night of his The fellow, whose name was Dan
murder. That's the reason he went Cummintcs, was a craven as well as a
I down to Lossing's on foot" bully. He confessed all and cleared
Who stole it? What for! An out- Meyers, but while awaiting his trial
' sider, who stole the saddle for its worth committed suicide.—if«w For*
would have carried it olT. An insider , ^mi
^ ^ l y would have stored it in the stall. | 8ELCCT SIFTINQS.
The tarpon ia the king of game fish.
The first incineration has just occurred
in Paris.
Weddiog rings were used by the
ancients.
An Enriiah I&wver ono* uS.1 ^t, I Who Was inside? A white man and two
e u ^ S d e v f d ^ ^ n l T h ^ ^ ' colo"^ assistants. Within an hour I
that the white ^
tingitpwrttystroiig.itisadmitt«ithat ^
a Aain'^of i i r e u ^ t i a l evidenw has 'S' " J^®" ^^^ .
often sent men to the gallows M a d " I
ouautance can be e n ^ n ^ >wa« it J. ^ ^y queerly. I arrested him,
b S t a i M M S i d o w ^ f ^^^ A
S?JSoI^S?'life. A ^ t n e s T ^ r S ' ^ ^^^ 8h«Ut daughter.
S b w i ^ c t e i o r t n ^ S J ^ ^ J ^ ^xdifleiant patents wero secured on
eomsS^wTu a l K n l S ^ ^ just struck him when the dogs chewing-gum last year.
w B w ^ H a itoa u u n patb aemand- ^^^^^^ greotinK to Graham, and, over-1 The bullet for the Snglish magaaint
Ithasoftan boeaamrted thatianoowit' ^^a ^
avidMoa. Hiwa m y hava bMu suoh « Gladstoua says so, and h«
r i S Sjra'^bJ^'u mpS^^ I The K,, West aO^enaaa tubahlsho^
* i^du*^ wd ^ ^ S T ^ h M ^ with k ^ M oU aad twiiM AttoafSSa
toh iw«jiae «WblUoa said to be
jK«»twaalf*aaiaa«»iwa.a«t«n«a! « lOOO jaait oldaad talttedat
S U M D A r S SERMON.
ONB OP REV. Dft. tAIittACte-S
STERlilNd DIBCOVBSES.
Snliject: '»The Moonlight Ride:''
TKXT: "Then I went up in the ni^JU tiy
the brook, ma vieuied the toall and turned
back, and enUrei b\i the. gate of the vaUeij,
aad so returned."—Kehemiah it, 15.
A dead city is more snggesUre than a liv-ing
city—past Eome than present Rome—
mlns rather than newlr frescoed cathedral
Bnt the beat time to visit a ruin is by moon-light.
The Coliseum is far more fascinating
to the traveler after sundown than before.
Ton may stand by daylight amid the monas-tie.
niins of Melrose Abbey, and study
oriel, and rosetted stone and mullion,
- Mirew their strongest witchery' by
, tv Some of yon remember what
(he eacbnii«r of S c o t l ^ said hi the "Lay
of the Last Minstrel t"
GWoo vntjdosilt lttTh>pya vitieow pi Wfsi rm ttealdtfoaletgehs tf tght,
Washington frving d(
Insian moonlight Upon the ibes the Anda-ilhambra
U amounting to an onchantolcnt: M;
riiins
.—/text
presents you Jerusalem in ruihs. The tower
down. The gates down. The walls down.
Everything down. Nehemiah on h<«8eback,
by moonlight looking uiion the rnins. While
he rirtes, there are some friends on foot going
with him, for they do not want tiie many
horses to dislnrb the suspicions of
the people. These people do no know
the secret of Neliemiah's heart, but they are
into this gate and out oC that, winding
through that gate amid the debris oronco
mat Jerusalem. Now tho horse comes to a
dead halt at the tumbled masonry where he
«umotpa» NowheshiesoifattheolMrred
timbers. Now ho eomeS alohtt wWe ttte wa-ter
under the moonUghk flashes from the
mouth Of the brased dragoA after n^UiiSh the
Sftto was tiamed. Heavy hearted Nehemiah!
Riding in and out, now by his tild home
deMaMj now by the defaced temple, now
Amid the scars of the city that bad gone
down under battering ram and confli
Uon. p>e esoorting party knows not
Nehemiah means. ]a he g^fang eraiyl Have
ngra-i
^ t
his own personal sorrows, added to tho sor-rows
of tho natioa. unbalanced his intellect?
^11 the midniiiht ex{dorakiou gov on.
Nehsmiah on horseback ridea through the
fish Mte, by the tower of the furnaces, by
the »ng>8 pool, by the dragon weU, in and
out, in and oat, until the midnight ride is
oompletod, and N«hemiah dUmounta from
his l^orse, and to tin am»se<l and contounded
^ inrrtdttloQs guard, dselares the
^ d seorek ot hk heart when he s«ya;
Jerusalem."
"JVtol, Nehemiah, have jm
'No," «''H>Haavvee you a—ny
.."NOb." , "Have yw» tfiiy eH>-
money r*
a«-
any m«
...... , J X
jueueef* "No." Yet that nvidniehV moon
n«ht rMe ot Nehemiah m u lM tti the «kuri>
om ralraildhu: of the eto of Jerwaleror The
Mo^.kMiwSot how tie thine «m to be
done. Some peo|^ wer« )«^\rlate aad ot-tered
B h j ^ l vloteaoe, laylnc tte
not U doM. Ml the
wwt on, staadtng
trowel ia OMO
' waa "
woMtM«a
tlod's wufi A dentist onea said to me:
"Ddas tliit hurtr' Said I: "Of course It
hdrta II iS id yodi* bMiieSs aa it is in my
pfdfassidni We hdVe tdhdrt befoKo Wd can
Help." You Will iiev^ UriderStddd I'edemp-tioii
until you dnderstaiid rdtd. A nUaii tells
ids thai Some one Is li member of the
chdrcli. It Hiaked no inlpression (M nly mind
at all. I simply Wadt to itaanf wtecinr ho
was converted in the old-fashioned tififi or
whether h3 wa? converted in the new-fashioned
way. If he was converted ia the
old fashioned way he wUI stand. If he was
converted iii thfl dew fwhioi^ way he will
not stand. That is all then b about iti A
man comes to me to talk about reUgion. The
flist question I as'x him is: "Do von feel vonr-seU
to be a sinner f If he sav: ' Well I -
yes," the hesitancy makes me feel that that
man wants a ride on Nehemiah's horso by
nudnight tbroush the ruins—iu by the gate
of his affections, out by the gate olT his wiU;
and before be has got through with that
midnight ride he wilTdrop the reigns on the
horsiS fleck, an-l Will take hta right
hand and smite Ou hiS heart, and say:
"God be msrcifol to me a sinner;"
aad before be has 'stabled his horse ho
wlUtaks his feet ottt ot die stirmpe, and he
wiU sUde down on the i^rodnd, and h^ wil.
:nieel, erybigi "Have nterdy on me^ O Ood.
according ttf Thy loyiU{< kindness, accordin-unio
the muU-'tdde Of Thy fenief mercies;
ulot out my tt-ditsgres^iom, for I acknowl-edge
my transgressions and my sin-i
are evir befdre THee.'' Ah, my ffionda,
yon see tUis. ia not M fompUmentary
gospel. That is what makes some peo
pie so mad. It comas to a nlan 0! a millio:i
dollars and impenitent iu his sins arid Buja:
"You're a pauper." It comes to a woman of
fairest cheek who has never repented, and
says: "You're a sinner." It comes to a man
priding himself on his independence and says:
"You're bound hand and foot by the devil"
Itcomestoour entire race and says: "You'i-o
a ruin, a ghastly rnin, an illimitable ruin."
Satan sometimes says to me: "Why
do you preach that truth? Why
don't Tou preach a xostel with
uo repeutanse m It; Why don't you Hatter
mon's hearts so that you make them feel all
light; Wlw don't you preach a humani-tarian
Kospol .#ith no repentance ia it say-ing
nothing abaut tbe rdin, talking idl the
-ime atoat rednmptloilr' I say: *'Gst thee
>«hind me, Salad." I would A i^
lend five souls the right WAy thatt
iw.nty th(UMnd the w i ^ iHtj.
t'he r»leraption of the gospel M a tui-^
root farce It tharoia no rata. "The lifhdle
ic«(I not a physician, but they that aro sick."
"If any one, thouch he be an angel from
h?av«n, preach by
this," says the a]
1 hfro niuit "
nil
, any ott _ ,
>e apoetle, "let him be accnrsed."
tu tho midnight ride over the
niios betoro Jrrosalein can be built. There
muat be the cUoking ot the hoofs before there
t.'«n be tho Wngiog ot the trowels.
Mysutjec
Iriuranhi—
wa<9 nny man in the world who had a rlgM
^ leetTlt
was a oup.
and It Tm
^ gran I plao*," aoitwai. The hall of that
palace wm two hunaiM test
'^nd the root hovered ov«
m»rh)e piUiurs, each pillar tfzty ^Nl
tnd the lateose blue o( IM Sky,
the d«en ^reen ot the tOreel foliaie, ....
)h« white ot the Oriveu snow, aU haac
'>r«n\blin« ia tho uphohtorT. Rat^ lay
rietwiN. you know very weU Qiat I t e arcM.
VKlure will aol put down (mMwhT
fra sie htm |oii» asM«c
slree^ a a d ^ ttnei
mmI hy^Mi* twa aa navo ot his
othei* gospel than
Again. My subject slvee me a n^imwn
o( b w and triuranhaA sadaese. It there
wa'i any man in tho world who t "
to mrate and giva up everythiM
was N«h«mla)v You a«yi "H^
liearer In the pa)«ee ot ^Uihan, <
tory answer, the old sexton said: "Sir, about
theselaraCer gravee, I don't know who are the
Lord's saints and who are not; but you know,
sir, it is clean dilferent with the bairns."
Oh, if you have had keen, tender, inde-scribabM
sorrow that comes from theloes
of a child, do not give up. The old sex-ton
wdn i i ^ b It is all well with the bairns.
Or, if you have sinned. If you have tinned
grievously—sinned until yon have been cast
out by the cbmroh, sinned until you have
been c4s£ tfnt by society, do not give up.
Perhaps there nUf be in this house one that
could truthfully utter toe lamentation of
another:
Onde I wss pore as the now, Imt I fail-
Fell Uke i itfoWdiM.f Tom heavea to hen—
Fell, to be tramipit.e d as ttlth ta tte street
PFrealTl itBoK b,e e sncnoifnfecd, wati,a (hpioitg d tdo diS,b ast; Sellini; my foiil to whoerer would tutf.
Oeillnc ia ihams for s morsel of bread,
HaUng tbe liTing and fearing tbe dead.
Do not g{V4 up. One like nnto the Son of
Oo.l comes to you to-day, saying: "Gojuod
sin no nKMr^" while he cries out to yonr as-sailantsi
"Let Hm that is without sin east
the first stone at ber." Ohl there is no reasoa
why any one ia this lioasai, by reaaea
ot any trouble or sin, should give ufli
Areyou a forrign;r, and in astrange ]aa«
Nehemiah was an eziie. Are you psnnllaesi
Nehemiah was poor. Are you bomesidct
Nehsmiah wan homesick. Are you broken-hearted;
Nehsmiah was broken-hearted.
But just see liim In tho text, rid-ing
alod; titt saerile;ad gravo of his
father, and t^ tiie dragon well, and
through the fish gats, and by the King's
lol, in anri out, in onl out, the moonlight
lling an the broken masonry, which throws
a long shiidow at which the horse shi^ and
at the same timi that moonlisht kindling up
the features of this man ttU yon see not
only the m<irk ot sad rsmidisoenca,
but tho courage, th? hope, the enthu-siasm
ot a man who knows that Jerasalam
will bs rabttilded. I pick you up to-day out
ot your sins and oat ot your sorrow, and I
put you agninst ths warm heart of Christ.
"The atsrual Uod is thy refuge, and under-neath
are the e^*erlasling arms."
nOVSEHOLD AFFAIRS.
Caat-otr Olovea.
To Prevent Hoaiery Fadlaff.
Hosiery whioh it is feared may fada
ihduld b« very qtt'cklj washed. For
delicate colors make a Utlher of para
soap and warm water, with a few drops
of ammonia, and wash rapidly; riaao ta
jlear water w.th a little ammuala ia It.
Instead of hanging socks aad stockings
np to dry some laundresses advtsa to
pull them into shape and roll up very
tightly in a clean cloth, lotting tham
become almost dry this w«y. Palo bluo
13 a fiaettng color, and a hot sun or hot
fire will oftaa fade it-JVei* r*rk WM4,
Did it ovar ocour to you, wrltst a
lady to tha iVajris rkntm^ to sava tha
wrHtt^osj^ially tha loag o««t~ot old
kid glotosi I SMkdo a tary pratti ca»d
case ot a pair ot t«a laiad oaeis , to
(akiag two j^acas of «ard hoaid aa4
ooTartttg tham aoatly oa om sMIa with
lha Md, aad oa tha othar w i t h a ^ o t
light blua attk. Cui tho ittk kid %
l i ^ w l d w j ^ Ihaidaoaiotwt^ hQU«
^ j w U M l f t ^ a U a w for a wuik M t
«aw I h a t w o f l M k «( M w n S b m
WISHB&
I woldd I might appirood^ thee^
Aa the moon dnwa
What stlU and stately coortssiy.
Clear-eyed and sdsran-hccwed;
Bn^ when their meetias eoaasai h » 1
In hia deep breaat dolb taida,
The heaveoa are stfll, in solsam|Dy,
The world is glorified.
IwouhllmifdiSappreeehlheek |j
As moslc, swift afloat,
Surpriaea, wifiittasiiildsn ](qr»
A waadersr ia a beat;
The sordid waBe o( Ufa Mi deem
Before that elarioaeiaar; '
A poasinc raptore oft leeolM
When days grow bleak satdiaM
Une^ted,
As J ^ , aad I>o«%Miil
^^somet
And4
And]
l i ^ J
1IU«0H OF T U mJkT
Some men kick against'a MB, awl
others foot i t
Those who widi to SM ieain Aiigwt
saw ice in February.
Don*t be angry when tha f h a t a f M lw
tells yon to saii&igly grfai aaA bM»&—
Life.
Crumbs of oomfoct aia aat tha a «»
which a mean joker seaktaaiteliMaila<^^
mate's bed.
There a n men who aia laaQy wiMb V s
ba wisa in one's own aoMril it ^tmf
wise.—i^in^fitM.
ThapoUoamaa oftaa iada MhhUMt-a
tight plaoa. H a j r t i M a t l '
side door.- J^fA JRHia
rhea iMa a n ^ qpMe asriMSSM
AU ettorts to f n d S SW
-MirrtoiU iVwaeii
Toa caa aa mon tttt a maa'aaWlto
by tho sisa of his hO, thaa M VM M
his stceagth by aoaswiaf ]u» srMNHk^.
shoulden.
sdy amokiag.** Mfc
aot la t h ^ i W tlfiHr^
w j h ^ M k K r i k m i f f k -
Hatar otw 4a«M t* w oli u
b a p N M M T t a S a M i t e W i«
Wlt&Ml JMAMl >
P s o U i ^ t s ^
i S i t r * ^
1 « M N | in* at the warn.
W h a n a n ^ a a w ) I t e talalltMaal
w w g o haa tiNa t» v M h a h o ^ t t h ai
hUt a oaaiai; «fa woald
^ watt tatamad Jaa Hosiaid asMKs
i a t t a M tw VaiklVasstiMt *Haa[^ot
i n qphwiaii la at tta waal A aad h*
•Ml ivMid at piMMiai, Fifth avaaaa
dtaM Mt hold tha h a m ^ hosaa) ia
Taacaaoaetheglanaadthtt
KttHar a t te fthe s s ^ aU aroaad yout
hMtt yaawooldttad ^ pun gold ot
danatia happiaasi yoa mast aeak it ia
m s n j M j ^ m Him at Kaw Yoric.^
l h a sat>i|iTi>iag Washtagtoa com
Hpsadiat at a Westera paper recently
Mi(n|jhed to his paper an imsgiaary
latmtaw with Dr. Wharton, the
•ekaowledged aadiority on international
Imr. Whea he eaw the paper the nest
Bontiag be was hocrified to learn that
Dr. Whartoa had diedeariy the previous
avcaiag at ttte tkse when he was repre-aoatod
as diatting with the corre-epeMdeut.
The historian of Beajamin Harrison's
iwfllhaveia one respect,
the Washington SUw, a great
Job than those who have re-uentaof
his prede-
- only can picture
^ incident. of^Thl^^,, memorable
t® Csi«tri>iH.^otogiaph
•ocwae^ was avidlable for the descrip-
. Pt General Hanisoa's coming.
••«ywhere the amateur photogiaphw
MBkinr Whmn hn miirbt dn
, aad the Presidential party was hi
.prey.
d e ?
JrtMdt had hraaAi aba«ra
P M N d m tha Maaa, aad Qiah»^
n t a d a a t ^ v ^ hw ia two waiks,
j ^ a i t t h a a j ^ ^ o t 8«ad«y, Oola^
h a r ^ a ^ o t Meads mat him
r i al
hlmaa4
rival it an al
«M hauad to cat yoa oat.
MMM^varyawaet oa hW*
aad
.dala
^iidkamttttbr l o ^ ^ g i r i , aad this „ .
^'Qte OhlMM m
•mallast UttpatiM aa aarth, i««d
with aa VdlMif i^ttf MV
t^aotliot w u tha aama to a
taot whtt Moa attar Um piaatiitag at
' " ' ' Tha ftiat M^r ot Ihdia>rttUb«r shaai
hrousht iaio tha latttd 8Uta» tiom
Sottl£ Amorloa ia xnra gtldad aad
(osemblad ia sham tha poiattd
ot a Chm«ttt m^adwiaa^
d a M ia • « M i i i « tOk at w ^ h*
wo«M 4a la «ata ^ tvttthar a a t u ^
him. Thus matlan stood whea h« Nt
Ottt aaa avaaiag t o r n her aad maka a
tart atiampt to Mttta. It was a attmrnor
hMotd ia aasry talk. datkd h^m.
Ho lalttratd homo pttte and ox«lted« his
olo^ing dkartaaged, aad his tMa blaod-iag
trom siaatclMS. Aa hoxw lator iha
WM touad doad, chokad to daath.
trmahltd, aad taally
^ is aa advetttuter and aa intar.
tM him look Ottt tor himself)**
Tta pneeat year will witness the ad-ditioatotiie
United States Navy of at
teaat fiv« new vessels, the Vesuvius,
Yorfctowa, Charlestoc, Petrel and Balti-noie,
with the poesibility of the Con-cord
aad Bennington joining the num
bar. lite Fhiladdphia and Newark
will also be launched this summer from
Cnmps's yards, so that the coming fall
will see tbe trial of naval vessels foUow-pkg
one upon the other in quick sue-cemicu.
The work on the Concord and
B e a a i i ^ n is being pushed steadily
forward, and it is expected that both
~ I will be launched before July.
Hm Chinese Kavy has wonderfully
improved, writes Frsak G. Carpenter,
^siBco tte late war with France. Their
MU
sqnadroa is commanded by an
sowal officer^ and their 8hip^
ia England and Germany, are
mmemg the bert of the small men-of-war
afloat. Ihey carry the latest improve
WBte ia the way of gons and the hulls
«CamM of their boats are <rfsted. They
X am told, sow making gunboats of
ikiir awa, aitd thqr Imvo a cruiser of
m o >aai aad of 8*00 horse-power, which
aot iMSg ago. nte conntty
Ims hat a saaall national debt, amount-
' A s •taHsrtas, to aot over $2?,.
m m i ^ M i J v • judidow taxation it
a aaffy oad ar^y irtddi
i f l w i e i t e t Asia tremble.
fitom the toad ia a grova ot tnoa, aad
^ a u p t o k d i o d by two paths or drives
fkom ^ fkont, tiraham fttlly iataadod
tooater ^ hottsa, bat whea he came
moa the groaads his coorage Csiled him.
Ha was afraid he might say or do aome^
Aiag rash in his present moo^'and vary
aeasibly decided to return to town and
defer his call till the next day. Next
morning his rival's dead body was found
on one the drive^ about halt way be-tween
the house and tho fence. He had
been strackdown with a bludgeon. Con-clusions
are always jumped at in murder
cases. Two ot the servants were at once
arrested, bat before noon they wore set
at liberty and Graham was taken into
custody. The chain already contained
•evoal links. Others were added the
moment he was arrested. Hewasdcead>^
Wly agiuted, hesitated to acknowledge
that he had been near the place, and a
blood stain was found on tho right
sleeve of his coat Before he had been
in jail one day even his own father bc-liered
him a murder. He was examined
aad bound over, and it was only after
that event that .he began to protest his
innocence. The girl who had been the
cause of it came nobly to his rescue.
While she truly loved him, she had been
iflHag igutiitfeb^tiiniiiwdg^ jMiS^^a;
oeaco. It was only on his cxaminaUoti
that ho nrol«.«teii, and ov«a his own
ffttiior believed him guilty. I hanpiiacd
to bo ia the town, and the xiray I oame
iato tho esse was by rolatiag the inct>
dents ot the one thave alnady aanrated.
lite prisottor himself tent for me and
told mo this story:
"I met the womaik, Mrs. Albright,
bv appotntmont We walked oat on
Clark atwioe to be al<me. t told hor
that my mind was firmly made up to seo
her no more, and she was very angry. I
should have raturncd with her, mt at
the little bridge she ordered me to leave
her, threatening to do desperate things
if I did not relent by the morrow. I
did not return by the highway, as our
meeting was a secret one and t did not
want it known. I crossed a coruer of
the graveyard, fell off the fence as I did
so, and there my face was scratched by
the briers.
i «'But you hardly denied your guilt," I
said.
! "Because I was confuted and stunned
by my arrest, and becausq I saw no use
ot it," he replied. "I have told yo.i tbe
truth. I want you to hely me prove my-self
clear."
I left him with tlie feeling that he was
ly'i—ng It o m^ and that nothing could be
done in his case. Ten or twelve days
had elapsed, but there had been no
i rain. I went to the bridge, crossed
the c ^ k at the point he told me
Ao, and soon came upon his traiL At
A S t Lottts taxtdoimUt who racoatly
pteswvod a lanto bald my« tha
nxttscltts ot tho htoMt w«n ot n«at ^ ta
aad tormcd aaarly oae^timrth ^ ^
wotght or the ctttira l^td.
Almost aaythtttg is iasaaltyv e m a
Kew York doetotw It yoa laoj^ heartily
lowat a
stamp, yott can be called insane.
An iateraauonal exMtdtioa ot postage
stamps is to ba opened at Amsterdam.
To give additional interest to the show
theto will be sketches ot the various
costumes worn by postmen tn dtffilrant
countries.
Jersey City, N. J., h u abolished its
newsboys' home. It was found that the
boys u ^ it tor a lo.^ng placo, and that
four-fifths of its lod.:;et« were boys who
ran away from home and had no real
need for its conveniences.
Scent pencils, composed of soUlied
perfame are a novelty. They are fitted
in silver holders, have a tiny ring at-tached
to them for fastening to the watch
' chain or chatelain, and when rubbed on
the hands or any j^rt of the dress emit a
delicate o -v..
Insurancecompan-es v^aut4o know all
: about it, you know. Because John
Obert was blown" up by 200 pounds of
nitro-glycerine in Pennsylvania and be-cause
only a piece of one of his toes
could be found, the ihsurance folks says
that he might have run away to trick
them.
He U|Wim yawf^^
t ^ a o t ^ »»at tost teUsttsthe^
fw mteat hiai^aMA Im was a sscvt^a^ »
btamta pakwe «l ArtamMo t ^ ^
maaea aadMMd>«yv while w«m hMMUae
thocapotwtaeto^Khve, ^ R b ^ i^
is the i M t ^ wMt y ^
H ^Ik^V y^l WMW
gmttmbts, m a r - " ' "
yo«»* Ihea
lavoA
riie felt terribly conscious striken and
anxious to believe in his protestation of
innocence.
When I came upon the ground, the
State had its case aU worked u r and
when I went over it to look for a flaw
I coidd find none. I had to acknowledge
that I was without hope. Indeed, I 1m-liev^
Graham guilty. His own expla-nations
rather strengthened that belief.
I c i n g ' s house faced the east The
highway in front ran north and south.
The lawn was twenty yards wide, and
one drive led from the north and the
other from the south end. Graham ap-proached
from the north. He would
nataraUy turn in at the first drive, but he
daimed to have gone on to the second.
He followed it to the house, passed
around i t played for two or three min
utes with the dogs, and then circled
about the fish pond, and took a short
cut across tbe grove and struck the road
not hitting the north path at alL The
dead man had come from the village as
well, and on foot He had come and at-tempted
to return by the north drive.
If Graham was innocent who was
guilty t
Not the slightest suspicion had been
directed elsewhere. It seemed hopeless
to look. I questioned and cross-ques-tioned
him, but he could not give me
thb slightest foundation for a clue or a
theory What I got came by accident
I asked to see the blood-stained cloth-ing,
and I found it to be a single daub
of blood OD ft wbito V68t. It was ft
carious mark, such as I had never seen
before, and when I quieUy investigated
further I discovered that the murdered
man had been struck on the back of the
head and fallen forward on his face. He
had very thick hair, and, while the blow
hskd crashed the skull, he had bled bnt
little. The blood would not spurt from
such a blow. The body had not been
fciaiajum t • t f , 1 , t
rail and the place where he had fallen.
I found the briars broken and crushed,
and from the thoms I gathered several
small fr^ments belonging to the suit he
wore. Further he had stepped into a
ditch where mud vfas soft at the time.
It had now dried hard and preserved the
print I measured i t and when I re-turned
to town I had beg n to believe
that Meyers was cither a good talker or
an innocent man. His story was all
right in one sense, but all wrong in the
other. Did he make the trail while
leaving the woman alive or dead?
An old saying always goes with an ar-rest:
"If he didn't do it, who did?"
Somebody must be held responsible.
After two or three interviews with young
Meyers and his parents, I doubted if he
could have choked the woman to death.
He was frail end in poor health, and she
was robust .tnd strong. She had scarcely
struggled at all, proving that she had
been attacked suddenly and that the grip
was a forcible one. He neck was dis-colored
as well as her throat, proving
that two large hands had been employed.
However, no suspicious characters had
been seen in the neighborhood, and the
murderer, if other tha'i Meyers, had
made his escape. I was completely
blocked, and could only hope that ac-cident
would help me out
It had been said that the body had
not been robbed. The only theory
seemed to be revenge. If it was not
Meyers, then it was some former lover,
and I went to Cincinnati to make in-qaines.
On the way up my watch
and my first call was at a
jeweler's. I had not been in his place
sixty seconds when in walked a stout,
strong fellow, who laid a lady's watch
on the showcase and said:
' 1 am going away, and I want to sell
this. It belonged to my wife who is
dead."
I A perfumer says that^jhereis inor^
Ctowilhght fraud j^rpetrated in the
; manufacture of attar of roses than in the-i
making of any other perfame. Connect-icut
is a prominent place of the pro-duction
of attar of roses. Heliotrope,
one of the most popular of perfumes, is
made by combining violet and vanilla
in certain proportions.
A youth who went into a Buffalo, (N.
! Y.) store and asked for socks, not know-
; ing the proper size, was told to hold
out his hand. The customer held out
his hand and doubled up his fist a.s di-rected.
The clerk took a sock from the
I box, wrapped tho foot around the fist
. and guaranteed a perfect fit. am
1 ust as sure it wiU fit you as though I
had measured your foot,"said he, "as
the distance around the fist is a'ways the
length of the foot"
Barmah's Hairy People.
A remarkable hairy family has long
existed at the court of Burmah, where
I Lord Crawford saw Shwe Maong, the
! first described of the family, in 1824. A
hairy daughter—now sixty-four years
: old—and a hairy grandson of the hairy
' Shwe Maong and his bsautiful wife still
survive, a hairy great-granddaughter
; having died last year. Several othei
children of the family have shown a
tendency to develop the peculiarity, but
died when quite young, and others have
' exhibited only normal hairiness. The
surviving man is thickly covered with
coarse, goat-like hair on the entire face,
' neck, shoulders, breast and spine, and
with a kind of down two inches long on
the limbs. The hair hiding the woman's
face is much finer, resembling that of a
spanieL Neither has hair on the hands
and feet They have no molar teetb,
and in the upper jaw have only the two
first incisors and two canines.—Trenton
{K J.) American.
how thsttkM
bwa tlMn>ttor«d aad bow HAt ...
watt* and brok«a. "WsW.'^
s ^ Kiag ArtaTersM, "what d o ^ waatV
•^Well,* tiM Kettsmtah
"I waat to 1 to ftx
H* Itavo ot M^titbwv t want to
«4wo the beauty «t the t wont
to vebutM the masonry of the «lty walk
t want paet^oHs to that t shall
»e% U hindmd tM my j^MmM[y. Aad be^
"1 want an ot^dw oa the man who keeps your
mmt ftor just so much timbw as t tnay need
tor the i«buiMI«nx «t the "Bow tons
riiaU you be Ronef satd Ute Kttig. TtK
tims ot ab%«M« is arntnged. In hoi
haste tliia e««ming a<i\wtuY«(> mMHt
to JerttaaWni, and in mv te.xt wo
tmd ktm hors^bacx-, in the midnight.
rMtng around the ruina It is through tho
spectae'os ot this s ttmt wo dfs«o\>«r tho
araentavachntent ot Kchemiali tor sacred
Jerusalem, whHi in aU ages has been
^ t»pa ot tl<e chui-ch ot Ool, our
Jerusalem, which wo love iust as muoh
as Kelieraiixh loved hi.s Jerusatein.
The fact is that you love the church ot Ood
•o much that tlicro i.s no sj ot on earth bo
sarrod, unless it is yoiu' own ftre^iJe. Ttte
<^nrcfa ha i l)«en It) you s < much comfort and
Illuniindtion that tlie>-o is up
mams you s^ iran as .to have it taiicea
against. If there havebeA timet when you
have been carried into captivity by
sickness, you louj^ for the church,
oui* holy Jerusalom, just as much ai
Nebemi.ih longed for his Jerusalem, and th^
llrstdnyyou came out you came to tho
house of the Lord. When the l^smple was
in ruins as ours was years ago, like Nehe-miah,
yon walke.1 around and looked at it.
and in the moonlight ton stood listening If
you could not hear the voice of the dead
organ, the psalm ot tho expired Sab-baU
». What Jerusalem was to Nehe-iniahj
the chnrch ot God is to yon.
-ske^cs and inQUels may scoff at tlie churoh
as au obsolete affair, asarelioot the dark
ages, aa a convention ot goody goody people,
bnt aU the impression they have ever made
on yonr mind a ^ n s t the church ot Go-1 is
abwlutely nothing. You would make more
sacrifices for it to-day than for any
other institution, and if it were need-ful
you would die in its defence.
Yon can take the words of the kingly poet
'IS he said: "If I forget thee, O Jerusalem,
let my right hand forget her cunning." You
understand In your own experience the
pathos, the homesickness, tha courage, the
holy enthusiasm of Nehemiah in his mid-night,
moonlight ride around the ruins of
his beloved Jsrusalem.
Again, my text impresses me with the fact
that before reconstruction there must be an
e^Ioration of rnins. Why was not Nehe-miah
asleep under the covers? Why was not
his horse stabled in the midnight; Let the
police of the city arrest this midnight rider
oat on some mischief. No. Nehemiah
js going to rebuild the city, and
ho IS makin:; tho preliminary ex-ploration.
In this gate, out that gale,
e«t, west, north, south. AU through
the rnins. The ruins must be explored be-fcw
'the work of reconstruction can bogin.
^ e reason that so many people in this
day, apparently converted, do not stay
converted is becauss thay did not first
explore the ruins of their own heart. The
nason that there are so many professed
Christians who in this day lie and forgo
ond steal, and commit adultery, and go to
tho penitentiary. Is because they first do not
learn the vnin of their own heart. They have
not found out that "tha heart is deceiCful
atove all things, and desperately wicked."
1 hey had au idea that they were almost right,
and they built religion as a sort of extension,
Manornamenial cupola. There was a super-structure
ot religion built on a sub-s
t r a i n of nnrepanted sins. The
trouble with a good deal ot modern
thTOlogy is that instaad ot building on tho
right foundation, it builds on the debris of
•n «nrogen3rated nature. They attempt to
rebuild Jerusalem bafore, in the midnigat oi
TOnviction, they have seen theghastiliness o£
the rum. They have such a poor founda-tion
for their ivligion th it the tirat northeast
storm of temptation blows ihe>u down, i
nave no faith in a man's conversion if he is
not converted in the old fashioned way—John
Bunyani way, John Wesley's way, John
Dilvln's ir.»y, Paul's way, Christ's way.
liMy (MM awd «M» Mv«r statu aiata,'
"[ lAva K«t my MM I aster
rsMlr idy t w W ^ ' ^ ^ M say t "t havo
taUea^M sk, a n i ^ iMv«r «aii sHutt
agata tw a asw tt(l> tt SMaa ean
taake y>Mi form ^ t rss^MMa, om'I
asks yott Itoep t t h* has Mtasd
<he tort* aad th«a blow away with tS% b
lows, awl thsa brimt ^ tMt ttoa oat on V
anvti aad bs^t wm stroke «t%«r siroki
ralM tlks t<hMt> bat to pttpm tt r-
\ bett.^r Oh, that tftTLMvl «
ot Nohemiah wouM roM* up «t
ffoken-Wsartsd pMpl* to rsbutvi. Wntppvl
bstr«y«d, Bhipwr««k«i, tmpHsoMO.1 Ivu
w«at rtgltt on, the Indlaa maKyi'
A)a«n>w nt« in his dunMon wHttag a lett«i\
and h« <tat«s tt "('Voni t ^ delectable orchard
ot the Iteonine prison. •' Tliat i« what 1 cal
sadv
> bai>y o
tu
the house ot God aad Mid:
riumphaut sadnass. I knew a moth r who
Ked lt«r baSy on Friday and on Sabbath
(pMarei -nAv«m«a< cla.«; give ra* a Sabbath tohool
clasa I Itave no chikl now )«tt m^
imd I wouM l(k« to have a das* ot Itttio
chilJr«n. Give ni>> r«al poor chiMren.
Give me a o'aw off tha back strMt."
lliat I aty, is bsautitn*. that is tri-imphant
salnees. At 3 o'clock this atter-
\oon, in a beautiful p«rIor iu lliiladelphtA—
A psrior pictnretl and skituettel—th're will
IM front ton to twentv destituts children of
tho street. It has been so every SabtMth
^tftamoou at a o'clock for many years. Ihosa
lestilute childrdn reoeive r«U|ioas instruc-tiou,
concluding with c.Mcee ana saniwichoj.
I low do I know that that h u ba:!n
for many years? I knew it in this \fay,
That was the first home in ?hiladeiphia
where I was called to comfort a jtreat sor
row. Tlioy haH a splendid boy and
he had bsen drowned at I^^ng Oi-ancli.
The father and uibthcr .ilmoot idolized
'ha boy, and the sob and shriek of tlint
atlier and mother as they liunj; over tiie
offln resound in my cars to day. TIi»r>i
-ieeme I to be no uso ot praying, tor when
ijnelt down to pray, the outcry in the roo:;i
drownad outall the pray. But the Lai-d
Mmforle l that sorrow. Tiiey did not for-get
their trouble. If you should goon lli<-
-nowiest winter aflernooa into Lairel Ilil
you would fln l a momument witli tlie woivl
•' Walter"' inscribed npon it, ani a wre.ilh o'
fresh fiowers nroiind the name. I think thoi-o
has not beon an hour all tlieso years, wiatei-or
summer, wh?n therj wa? not a wro-.th "f
rcsh nround Wn'tai-'.^ r>
tsufi tbe Cbristlan mother who sends those
flowers there, having no child left, Sabbath
afternoons others ten or twenty of the lost
ones of the street. That is beautiful. That
is what I call busy and triumphant sadness.
Here is a man who has lost his property. He
does not go to hard drinking. He does not
destroy his own llffc He comes and says:
"Harness me for Christian work. My
money's gone. I have no treasures
on earth. I want tre.nsares in heaven. I
have a voice and a haart to serve God." You
say that that man has failed. He has not
failed—he has triumphed. Ob, I wish I
couM persuade all the people who have a»y
kind of trouble never to give up. I wish they
would look at the midnight rider of the t«xt,
and that the funr hoofs of thxt
beast on which Nehemiah rode
might cut to pieces all yonr
discouragements and hardships and
trials. Give np! Who is going to give up,
when on the bosom ot God 'lio can havo all
his troubles hushed? Qiyeup! Never think
of giving up. Are you borne down with
A little child was fonnd hold-her
dead mother's hand in
the darkness of a tenement house,
and soms one coniinf? iu, th^ lit-tle
girl looked up, while holding her dead
mother's hand, and said: "Oh, I do wish that
God had made moro light for poor folks."
My dear, God will be your ligiit, God will be
your shelter, Go 1 will be your home. Are
you borne do-;vn with tho berdavements of
lite? Is the honso lonely now that
the child is gone • Do not give up. Think of
what the old sexton said when the minister
asked him why he nut so much care on tho
little graves in the c»metery—so much more
care than > n th-3 larger graves, and the old
sexton said: "Sir, you know that 'of such is
the kingiom of h'^av3n,' and I thinic the
Saviour is pleased wlien He sees so
much white clover growing around
these little graves." Bnt when the minister
pressed the old sexton for a more satisfac-poverty?
ing
CMa ar
AtH» WMteg te ^ M ^
ambMlk domt M4 ttaid tlMtKa text*
dla^thMltiMydwteUtbMMtUoai tha
watit wlU t^w ftom tkA tifM ot
tha (lama *»A tha war to Mttwtm^^
Whaa witk tkatMAdla
as to tMottMtli 4M*. Urn vialN t«M l»
thotap^lha^mbnllh
(s then loli^itd
awl vmMwi*
(a tka
aMth tho rtM (M Mma I w i t ^ ot
taataf t k a ^ k w ( h t ^ w l t h iiUok
tka tNMM te cavotM ta W«mm t n ^
aadMoh Mt. tMlMtUy t t e t a j ^ a f iA
ambtoUh w«u«o«t toaaar tkM tte oUmt
part of tt, ud ti tho »%|ortty at oavtt
laay ha thas ac«o«at*d (M. A tilk am^
bt^la Is m«fih thiittod bibaii« ^^
opea to dry i tha stlR baoomet suotchod
aad stiff aad vrlU sooaer split thas oaiad
tor. Whaa aot ta «ta lat tha hMi tta
looea, ttot^tonad dowa, thocnasMaia
lam apt to split th>m thk osago. lDli>
poncawlthan ambnlla oosa aamM ta
travaltnf, aa a ptotoctloa firom dast aad
oinders. T^ the fricttoa from the case
IS partially do* tho mtauto partitions
that appear ia tha silk la sptto ot all oara
and axpease ta pa ^a^tag. Whea car^
ried m tha hand ta anttdpatian ot (hll-tag
waatiier, tlia folds may ba strapped
down as it adds to the aeatness ot iU ap>
peatattoe.—rMw IVt /aJ^aitat
Homo Oheese Kaktnc.
For the manufactare of cheese oa s
small scale aro i^uired a cheese hoop
about ten inches in diameter with a fol
lower, a new wa$htub and a press. Th«
milk should be taken perfectly ftesb
from the cow and strained through t
cloth into the cbcese tuU As a sAlon
of milk will make one pound of ^eest
the prccise quantity at a time shonld b(
noted. Part of it should be warmed,
so that the temperature of the whoU
when in the tub shall be raised to eighty-three
degrees Fahrenheit The rennet
thoroughly cleaned or prepared, should
then be adde^ enough being used tr
produce curdling in abour forty minuteo.
As soon as the curd will break smoothly,
it should be cut with curd knives intt
squares and then allowed to stand nnti'
the whey runs olf. Part of this whej
is then heated, the mass of curd is liftec
and broken in minute pieces and warn
wbey is added until the the temperature
of the whole is raised ninety-eight de-grees
Fahrenheit. When cool this oper
ation is repeated until the curd becoiuei
crumbly, easily falling to pieces whei
pressed in the hand. The whey is ther
all drained oS and the curd put into the
cooler and cut up with curd knives
MBttf)*' I k i t C S w I t tl
A OavalyHt maa laaiato
Ava^wkM^Aottw
S«diMhvoaM f M HMMi.
that lha mwMA i H i l t f t M i l
to mmj IfW NMnr
JlkijaoiiM^
»ia. & tt
had a Mitaw aMMa tk HMteM
SI'ttA.*' I
„ ta sltda i N i i t l B t M H l M r i R*
tha a^Jng j
MM. T«iafittte<.«<C>K « w i t M « » <
attwriy haattlM^ y a a i i m h k A m
hav« h a e o w r
"It's awtal to U aa asatssMot at
heavaa's oMMst M m t f e f T V ^ kivitfk
k«l bahyy ptM<w« lakaa ter »
Vn Jacksoa. ot ViacaaM%
home aad told klh wtte t ^ tfea t A
supply of tho world woaM Isataa^MV-yein
moro, aad she Ml ia a l u S i iA
broke her am. 8ha atlatward
bered that they had alwaya
wood.—i>f(rM( i>Vw Frtm
Sagaeity ot Shepfeord Ban.
A gentleman who hH had
ble to do with shephords aad duuims Ih
England aad S c o t M , sysaktag at t i»
story published ia the Ongtmim
or two «inea i^MMt a •<1
ewes and wotheia of a flaak
the earmarks, say tharii ta m <
whst it is truo. Ho has kMwtt
go into a drove of aheap i M
marked with several different ssarks aadi
single out every one bearing his ssastsr%
mark. He lays the shepherds tiaiB ttew
don by taking them along wheap
ainndd etrh eth deoirg c iasr et hauss t htaeuyg ohmt trofe i the
marks. He says fbrthur thoS at
sheep market in Isliagtoei A l m a M k
the r sheep marked with blaa m n t -
paint and when the drives Mb
dog will go into tho hood aad hriay oM^
whea the temperature has fallen some-1 his master's sheep, telliag ttem by A t"
what it is turned over and left until ii color of the marking. Shapherd doMi
assumes a flaky condition. Whennearl] are the most intelligent e(
dry salt is added,, and the whole ii * - " ' ^
mixed thoroughly with a curd mill. 1
is then put into the bandage inside ot
the hoop, and is put on the press. Af
ter remaining there from two to foui
hours it should be taken out and turned.
The next day it may be taken from th«
press and put on a shelf to cure.—.Sftfu
rork Herald.
family, and when they are Btlaihglt
among herds of aheep aad tiainod t»
charge of them, it is but reasoaabls ta»
suppose that they msyleam to mrtlew
mai^ of any kind oa them.—ArlEwwt
Ongonian.
Bahhit Orivoa.
Rabbit drives are a n i ^ the o i t e ^
tbe day. The fence helongiBg
Recipes. tioshen l^abbit ExtermifeaSiag^ '
T.>ngueor H vm 8\sdwiche?.—Choi we are informed, is to be
fine the lean of cold boiled tongue oi i by replacing tho redwoOd p o ^
ham, season with prepared mustard and | fore used with poets ma^ of
black pepper, add melted butter and
sweet cream until smooth like a paste,
then spread between buttered slices ol
bread.
CoRX-SrARCH PiKsi.—Two tablespoon
fuls corn-starch dissolved in a little milk,
the yelks of two eggs, one quart of milk,
thrse cups of sugar; boil the milk and
stir into it the beaten yelks mixed with
the corn starch, add the sugar; line pans
With paste, pour in the custard and bake;
oeat the whites of the eggs with half a [
eup of sugar, spread over the top of the
pies when they are done and brown
ilightly in the oven.
with solid iron pointa. Aa
is being formed among Ibe Humitt
of Iraver for the porpoe^of ~
good corral, and from t h a w i l i
we hear a similar report
laudable one sad aoOlacisSI']
wheat farsBors t>r coteaiits
an organized eOMt t s i
pests, which ara igsia ^
too plentifttL ^ "
to San Francisiedyi
hunters ev«
can pay feci
•o spare.—f
- i i i i t i i ^ ^